The Warehouse

While go-go was the rage in Washington, D.C., and hip-hop was ascendant in New York City, gay Chicago was laying the foundation for the most lastingly influential of early 1980s African-American dance musics, house. The name came from a club, the Warehouse, where deejay Frankie Knuckles eschewed the contemporary gay dance music style, the ultrafast Hi-NRG. Instead, he made new music by mixing together snatches of other material—gloomily anxious Joy Division tracks, synthesizer-driven Eurodisco, snatches of psychedelia, and old soul hits.

House mixes rapidly made their way to vinyl, notably on Trax and Rocky Jones’s DJ International label, which, respectively, produced the first big local hit, Farley Funk’s “Love Can’t Turn Around” (1986), and the first international house hit, Steve (“Silk”) Hurley’s “Jack Your Body.” The house sound was, in the words of DJ Chip E, “a lot of bottom, real heavy kick drum, snappy snare, bright hi-hat, and a real driving bassline to keep the groove.”